As I said in your Digging for Treasure post, your Post-Processing techniques I think take away from the image. A lighter touch would go a long way in improving the final product you've got here. The faux-blur you've got going on looks cheesy which is too bad because you've got a very beautiful subject here.

A few notes about portraits in general to remember... pose the subject for the age they are (this pose would be good for the "mom's little angel"-type shots of 5-6 year olds, not a grown woman), so in this case, lose the hand under the chin.

Because of where the hand enters the frame, we have no context of where it came from, and it's also cropped right at the wrist. Cropping at joints is a no-no because it creates unnecessary tension within the photo. It happens every once in a while, so it's something to be wary of (I catch myself allll the time!).

Finally, when dealing with glasses of any kind, reflections suck. You have to either work to incorporate them creatively or work to minimize or eliminate them. I'm assuming that in this photo you wanted to go "glam" so they are meant to be a prop along that theme. The reflection is just prevalent enough to be distracting in the frame, but often a minor head tilt or even a movement of subject and camera will remove the reflection. If you're dead-set on using the glasses in the shot, find a way to keep them in the frame where they won't detract from the shot in general.

You did a great job on finding a non-harsh area of light though, as the shadows are fairly well-muted and the highlights aren't crazy-bright.

TL;DR - Lose the hand-pose because it's not age-appropriate for your subject, lose the hazy faux-blur, and watch your reflections on eye-wear in the future. Keep up the good work on finding the light!